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Hiking trails & Routes
Germany
Rhineland-Palatinate

Church of Our Lady – Porta Nigra loop from Trier Hbf

Routes
Hiking trails & Routes
Germany
Rhineland-Palatinate

Church of Our Lady – Porta Nigra loop from Trier Hbf

Easy

4.7

(84)

634

hikers

Church of Our Lady – Porta Nigra loop from Trier Hbf

01:29

5.76km

30m

Hiking

Easy hike. Great for any fitness level. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: April 18, 2026

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

Get Directions

1

1.28 km

Church of Our Lady

Highlight • Religious Site

The Liebfrauen Basilica in Trier is the oldest Gothic church in Germany and the parish church of the Liebfrauen parish. Built in the high Gothic style by French architects, it is hard to beat in terms of filigree beauty and Gothic elegance. The floor plan has the shape of a Greek rose. Closed in January 2008, the church was reopened in September 2011 after extensive interior renovation under the motto "Let the rose bloom again".

(liebfrauen-trier.de/)

Translated by Google •

Tip by

2

2.50 km

Incredibly many details of the various crafts are distributed here on eight oak trunks. It is almost a challenge to see all 36 representations correctly.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

3

3.20 km

Constantine Basilica

Highlight • Historical Site

71 meters long, 32.60 meters wide and today with the south gable over 36 meters high. These are the dimensions of the basilica. Around 310 it was built by the Roman emperor Constantine as a palace hall (throne room). In the middle of the 19th century, the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm IV restored the building as a church for the Protestant community. The basilica can accommodate up to 1,300 people.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

4

3.68 km

Imperial Baths, Trier

Highlight • Historical Site

opening hours
Tuesday - Sunday: 10am - 6pm

The Kaiserthermen were planned as an imperial gift of a bathing complex to the people of Trier. After a halt to construction in the 3rd century, construction work on the Imperial Baths resumed in the 4th century AD. It was now planned to be used as barracks, possibly for the Imperial Mounted Guard. In the later centuries, the imperial thermal baths were converted and used as a castle, city wall and monastery. Excavation work on the remains of the monument began in the 19th century. In 1984 some windows in the apse were reconstructed. To this day, the Kaiserthermen are part of the city center of Trier. The proximity to the palace auditorium shows once again the huge dimensions of the palace district at that time.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

5

4.56 km

At the top of the fountain stands the city's patron saint, Peter, who gave the fountain its name.
The four cardinal virtues are grouped over a hexagonal basin, namely Justitia - justice, with sword and scales, Fortitudo - strength, with a broken column, Temperantia - moderation, with wine and water, and Sapientia - wisdom, with mirror and Line.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

6

4.63 km

Trier Main Market

Highlight • Historical Site

The main market of Trier is the central and one of the largest squares in the city.

It is located in the historic city center directly in front of the cathedral city in today's Mitte/Gartenfeld district. The most important urban commercial streets come together here. In 958, Archbishop Henry I equipped the main market with the market cross as a symbol of sovereignty. The main market was a place for selling goods and trading in the medieval city.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

7

4.68 km

Group of three half-timbered houses built next to each other around 1600 at the junction of the main market and Simeonstraße (the sculpted year 1605 on facade no. 22 and the painted construction date 1607 on facade no. 23 are not original. The houses are located on the eastern border of the medieval , existing Jewish quarter until 1418. The two northern ones are built over the so-called Small Jewish Gate (1406: cleynen Jews porten), which can be proven to have existed since the second third of the 13th century.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

8

5.02 km

Porta Nigra

Highlight • Historical Site

The Porta Nigra is the best preserved Roman city gate north of the Alps - an incomparable connection between the ancient past and today's modern city. The old city gate dates from 170 AD, when the Romans liked to build public buildings out of large blocks. The Porta Nigra has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a protected cultural asset under the Hague Convention since 1986.

Translated by Google •

Tip by

B

5.76 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

3.05 km

1.81 km

608 m

159 m

125 m

Surfaces

4.50 km

694 m

510 m

< 100 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Weather

Powered by Foreca

Thursday 25 June

40°C

23°C

16 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 18.0 km/h

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